NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The Titans continued to gut the organization of people to whom their logo really means something, forcing out longtime PR man Robbie Bohren Monday.
Bohren, who joined the team in 1997, was one of its longest-tenured employees. He became the head of the football PR department in 2000 and was vice president of football communications.
The Titans intend to hire a new person for the post. Bohren was offered a role in special projects which he declined.
It’s the fourth move this offseason to part ways with long-term behind-the-scenes staples who had nothing to do with the football team's miserable performance over the last three seasons.
They got Ran Carthon. But the #Titans also love to fire long-serving background people who've had zero bearing on shitty football.
— Paul Kuharsky (@PaulKuharskyNFL) March 24, 2025
Robbie Bohren was an excellent PR man. He heard me out. We fought plenty. He never held a grudge to the extent I consider him a friend. That's…
I recently complained that the team held no press conferences for new free-agent additions, and then when the team writer had exclusive access to Dan Moore in a Pravda-style setup. That was not a new setup by public relations, that was a new strategy from management.
Previously, the Titans fired vice president of team operations Brent Akers, vice president of football technology Anthony Pastrana, and senior director of security John Albertson. After those moves team president and CEO Burke Nihill, who played a big role in hiring Carthon and Brian Callahan, callously said the team "has got to set a new standard, and that requires hard decisions."
Those standards don't apply, apparently, to the scout who wrote the team's initial report on Treylon Burks, the receiver the Titans drafted 18th in 2020 thinking he could offset AJ Brown who they traded in a deal that yielded that pick and No. 101.
While Jon Robinson ultimately made that pick, the Titans, who've turned over their scouting department very little through multiple regimes see value in staying the course there.
Akers, Pastrana and Albertson were incredibly well-regarded by their peers around the league and inside the building. Bohren holds the same standing.
In recent years the team has done the same with high-ranking executives Ralph Ockenfels, who negotiated multiple stadium naming rights deals, as well as Stuart Spears, who was instrumental in planning the NFL Draft in Nashville in 2019.
Bohren's staff of Dwight Spradlin, Jared Puffer, Kaylee Conners and Travis McDaniel is in place at this time. So is Vice President of Communications and Corporate Affairs Kate Guerra and the manager under her, Savanna Howie.